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Tom Harding

Salvation Is Of The Lord

Jonah 2:9
Tom Harding March, 9 2025 Audio
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Jonah 2:9...Salvation is of the Lord.

The sermon "Salvation Is Of The Lord" by Tom Harding emphasizes the sovereign work of God in the salvation of sinners, drawing primarily from Jonah 2:9. Harding articulates four critical points regarding the doctrine of salvation: its origination, execution, application, and sustaining power, underscoring that salvation is entirely a work of God, not man. He references Scripture such as Revelation 13:8 and 2 Thessalonians 2:13 to demonstrate the divine planning of salvation from eternity and Hebrews 9:12 to affirm its accomplished execution through Christ's atoning sacrifice. The practical significance of this message is to illuminate the believer's reliance on God's grace, reinforcing the Reformed doctrine that salvation is a monergistic work of God where human effort contributes nothing but is instead a response to divine initiative.

Key Quotes

“Salvation is of the Lord. That's his confession. That's his hope of salvation.”

“If we're ever to be delivered, God must do it.”

“Salvation is something God does in us, not what we do for Him.”

“To entertain any idea that man is saved one day and lost the next is to believe that salvation is of works and not of grace.”

What does the Bible say about salvation being of the Lord?

The Bible affirms that salvation is completely of the Lord, as seen in Jonah 2:9 and other scriptures.

Jonah 2:9 powerfully encapsulates the essence of salvation by declaring that 'Salvation is of the Lord.' This statement highlights that the entire work of salvation—originating from God's eternal decree to the execution of Christ's atonement—is solely His doing. In understanding this doctrine, we see that it is not our actions or merit that contribute to our salvation; rather, it is the sovereign grace of God that redeems and reconciles us. Scriptures such as Ephesians 1:4-5 and 2 Thessalonians 2:13 reinforce the truth that God's grace is the initiating force behind our salvation, determined long before the foundation of the world.

Jonah 2:9, Ephesians 1:4-5, 2 Thessalonians 2:13

How do we know that God's sovereignty includes salvation?

The sovereignty of God in salvation is evident through scripture, particularly in Ephesians 1:4-5 and Romans 9:16.

God's sovereignty over salvation is prominently displayed throughout the scriptures. In Ephesians 1:4-5, we read about God's predestination of believers before the foundation of the world, emphasizing that our salvation is part of His divine plan. Furthermore, Romans 9:16 clarifies that 'it is not of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God that sheweth mercy.' This illustrates that it is ultimately God's will and mercy that determine salvation, not human effort or desire. Recognizing God's complete authority in the process of salvation gives believers assurance of their eternal security, knowing they are chosen and kept by His unmatched grace.

Ephesians 1:4-5, Romans 9:16

Why is it important for Christians to understand that salvation is of the Lord?

Understanding that salvation is of the Lord helps Christians recognize God's grace and the futility of self-effort in redemption.

For Christians, grasping the truth that 'salvation is of the Lord' is core to their faith, enhancing their appreciation of God's grace while diminishing reliance on personal merit. This perspective fosters humility, as believers acknowledge that their transformation and reconciliation to God is solely attributed to His initiative and mercy. The implications of this understanding are profound; it protects believers from falling into self-righteousness and teaches them to lean entirely on Christ’s finished work. Furthermore, the assurance found in knowing that God is the author, executor, and sustainer of salvation instills the confidence that their salvation cannot be lost or undone.

Jonah 2:9, John 6:37, Jude 1:24-25

How does God execute His plan of salvation?

God executes His plan of salvation through Christ, who provided atonement for sin and executed the means of our redemption.

The execution of God's plan for salvation is most clearly manifested through the person and work of Jesus Christ. As articulated in Hebrews 1:3, it is Christ who by Himself purged our sins, indicating that no other mediator or sacrifice is necessary for redemption. In Hebrews 9:12, we learn that He obtained eternal redemption for us with His own blood, emphasizing that this act was solely God's provision, reflecting His initiative in saving the lost. Through this sacrificial system established by God, believers can find true cleansing and justification, assuring them that this is not reliant on human efforts, but rather the completed work of Christ, as God executes His perfect will.

Hebrews 1:3, Hebrews 9:12

Sermon Transcript

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This morning for our Bible study,
I would have you turn to the book of Jonah. The book of Jonah
is found in the Old Testament, the book of Jonah, chapter 2. We have a very familiar story
with most of you about Jonah, how he was swallowed by a fish
prepared by the Lord. And let's read a few verses here
from Jonah, chapter 2. He said, I am cast out of thy
sight, yet I will look again toward thy holy temple. He said,
The waters compassed me about, even to the soul. The depths
closed me round about, the weeds were wrapped about my head. You
see, the desperate conditions Jonah was in. I went down to
the bottom of the mountains, the earth with her bars were
about me for ever. Yet hast thou brought up my life
from corruption, O Lord my God. When my soul fainted within me,
I remembered the Lord, and my prayer came unto thee, into thy
holy temple. They that observe lying vanities
forsake their own mercy." You see, Jonah's desperate condition. He said, I will sacrifice unto
thee with the voice of thanksgiving. I will pay that that I have vowed. Salvation is of the Lord. Jonah
openly, freely confesses before God in his desperate, dying condition. And he says, if I'm ever to be
delivered, God must do it. Salvation is of the Lord. That's
his confession. That's his hope of salvation.
And then we read in the next verse, "...the Lord spake unto
the fish, and it vomited out Jonah upon dry land." Now, my
friend, this story of Jonah's confession and Jonah's condition
teaches us how God saves sinners. This story was not given to entertain
us. It was given to instruct us and
teach us in the way of grace. that salvation is all of God.
Our Lord Jesus Christ, we read in the book of Matthew, used
this very experience of Jonah to preach the gospel of sovereign
grace to those self-righteous Jews, those Pharisees who sought
salvation by their works. Our Lord said to them, there
shall be no sign, no truth given to this evil generation, but
that truth of the prophet Jonah, that salvation is of the Lord. Now, what do we mean when we
say that salvation is of the Lord, that salvation is all of
God? What do we mean? It simply means
this, the whole of the work, the whole of the saving work,
whereby a guilty, depraved sinner is lifted from the dunghill of
sin, from the pit of sin, washed in the blood of Christ and made
clean. justified by the grace of God,
translated out of the kingdom of darkness into the kingdom
of God's dear Son, predestinated to be conformed to the image
of the Lord Jesus Christ. That's the truth of God's redeeming
grace, predestinated to be just like Christ, made accepted in
the Beloved, in the Lord Jesus Christ. In Him we stand wholly
unblameable, unreprovable in God's sight. The whole of the
work whereby we're justified, whereby we're chosen, whereby
we're called, whereby we're predestinated and translated and justified,
reconciled, redeemed, is the work of God alone. Now, I'm saying
as simply as I can and clearly as I can, our condition and our
depravity because of our condition of our sin is so desperate. We're
in a condition like Jonah. Our sin has taken us down to
the depths of depravity and the depths of death, the depths of
ruin. If we're ever to be delivered, God must do it. David put it
this way. Jonah said that salvation is
of the Lord, and that's a confession of the believer. The believer's
confession before God is that God saved me. It's God who saved
me, God who called me. David put it this way. David,
the king of Israel. David, the great writer of the
Psalms, said, this is the Lord's doing. Salvation is God's doing. Salvation is not what we do for
God. Salvation is what God has done for us. This is the Lord's
doing and it's marvelous in our eyes. Now, here are four thoughts
that I would like for you to remember about God's salvation. Salvation is of the Lord. Now,
here's the first thought. Now, listen to me carefully this
morning. Salvation is of the Lord. in its origination, in
its planning. Our Lord purposed, planned the
salvation of His elect, the salvation of His chosen before the foundation
of the world, before Adam was created, before Adam sinned,
before Adam fell. The surety of the covenant, the
Lord Jesus Christ stood as a mediator. He stood as the Lamb that would
be slain in the mind and the purpose of God before Adam ever
sinned. Before ruin, God had the remedy. You see, salvation is of the
Lord in its origination. We read in Revelation 13, verse
8, the Lord Jesus Christ stood as a lamb slain before the foundation
of the world. Salvation is older than creation. Salvation is older than Adam's
sin. It was born in the secret counsel
of God. Every detail of the sinner's salvation was purpose decreed
before time began. Salvation is eternal. God saves
with an everlasting salvation. If you're saved and justified
in Christ, it's because God from eternity purpose planned and
predestinated to bring it to pass. God determined your salvation
in eternity. Salvation is of the Lord in its
planning. and its origination. Listen to
this scripture in 2 Thessalonians 2.13. We are bound to give thanks
always to God for you, brethren, beloved of the Lord, because
God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation. To deny this
truth, that salvation is of the Lord, that salvation is all of
grace, is to deny that God is God. You see, God determined
salvation, and God determined whom he would save. He said it's
not of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth. It's God
who would have mercy. He said, I will have mercy on
whom I will have mercy. Now, have you got the first thought?
Salvation is of the Lord in its origination. Secondly, salvation
is of the Lord in its execution, its execution. God not only purposed
the sinner's salvation, But he also provided the means whereby
he could justly accomplish it. Why is the sinner saved? Well,
certainly not because of anything the sinner provides or the sinner
does. The Lord Jesus Christ provided
sufficient atonement. God in Christ provided the sacrifice. God in Christ provided the Lamb
by His blood. You see, that's the God purchased
us with His own blood. We read in Hebrews chapter 1.
Salvation is of the Lord in His execution. Hebrews 1, we read,
when He by Himself purged our sin. You see, He executed that. When He by Himself purged our
sin, He sat down at the right hand of God. Again, we read in
Hebrews 9, verse 12, He obtained eternal redemption for us with
His own blood. As our high priest, He didn't
bring the typical animal blood sacrifice. He brought His own
blood. You see, He executed. this atonement. He executed this salvation. He executed the blood sacrifice. No one has helped to provide
this sacrifice. It was given of God. John identified
the sacrifice of God when he said, Behold the name of God. You see, it's God's sacrifice.
It's God's atonement for sin. That's why we must insist upon
And the Scriptures clearly teach that salvation of the Lord, not
only in its origination, but also in its execution, God provided
the sacrifice. And my friend, know this, what
God has provided, God will accept, and nothing else. It's the blood
of Jesus Christ that makes atonement for the soul. Now, who provided
that? Who executed that? Now, let's
be honest. God did that. Salvation is of
the Lord in its execution. God provided the sacrifice. God
made Him to be sin for us who knew no sin, that we might be
made to righteousness of God in Him. Thirdly, salvation is
of the Lord in its application. Its application. Now, most lost
religious people believe that God's done all He can do and
the rest is up to us. My friend, let me ask you some
questions. Can a dead sinner, a spiritually
dead sinner, give himself spiritual life? No. Salvation is of the
Lord. It's God who must quicken. Can
a lost sheep find itself? Can a lost sheep save itself?
We read in scripture, all we like sheep have gone astray.
Can an Ethiopian change his skin? Well, certainly not. Can a leper
change his spots? Certainly not. Salvation is of
the Lord. God must supply this salvation
to the sinner's heart. You see, salvation is a heart
work. Salvation is something God does within us by His grace,
by His purpose, through God the Holy Spirit. This is exactly
what happens when God is pleased to sovereignly regenerate and
to give us life. Our Lord said you must be born
again, born from above, born of God. Paul put it this way
when he wrote to the Ephesians, you hath he quickened who were
dead in trespasses and in sin. Who did the quickening? God did. Paul wrote this to the Philippians,
Philippians 1.6, it's God who has begun a good work in you.
And God who has begun the good work in you, he says we're confident
that God will finish it. James wrote this, of his own
will, beget he us. with the word of truth. You can
see that salvation, that is God applying this salvation to the
sinner's heart, being justified, reconciled, redeemed, is a work
of God alone in the heart. It's what God does in us by His
purpose and by His grace. Psalm 110, we read, Thy people
shall be willing in a day of God's power. And someone might
say, And here's an argument that I often hear, well, man must
believe, a man must repent. That is true, but my friend,
believing and repenting is never the cause of salvation, it is
the evidence of salvation. We're born again not of the will
of the flesh, not of the will of man, but we're born of God. We believe and we repent because
God has given us life. He that believeth on the Son
hath life. and shall not come into condemnation. Now, simply, let me say this
to you. If you're trusting something you have done, something you
did, something you gave, some decision you made, my friend,
you don't know the gospel. You're not found in Christ. Salvation
is something God does in us, not what we do for Him. Salvation
is not received by doing. Salvation is received by believing. Faith is the gift of God, not
of works, lest any man should boast. Now, have you got the
first three? Salvation is of the Lord in its origination.
Now, this is what Jonah learned, and this is what every redeemed
sinner has been taught of God. Salvation is of the Lord in its
origination, in its execution, in its application. God must
make application to the heart. Now, here's the fourth thought.
Salvation is of the Lord in its sustaining power. Those whom
God saved by His grace are saved with an everlasting salvation. They are eternally secured, never
to be lost again. Our Lord said that in John chapter
6. All that the Father giveth me shall come to me, and those
that come to me I will in no wise, I will never cast out. He saves us with an everlasting
salvation. All of God's They will persevere
in faith because they're preserved by the power of God, or kept
by the power of God. To entertain any idea that his
man is saved one day and lost the next is to believe that salvation
is of works and not of grace. Listen to the scripture we read
in the book of Jude, down to him that is able to keep you
from falling and to present you faultless before the presence
of his glory with exceeding joy. You see, salvation is of the
Lord. To the only wise God, our Savior, be glory and majesty
and dominion both now and forever. Amen. Now let me ask you this
in closing. Have you learned that very vital
lesson that Jonah learned that day as Jonah confessed unto God? Salvation is of the Lord. I pray that that's your experience
of grace in your heart. And if it's not, I pray that
God would do a work of grace in you by his spirit through
this gospel of God's grace. Now, if you would like to listen
to this message again, Salvation is of the Lord, gladly send it
to you, request a copy, or you can write to me at this church,
6088 Zebulon Highway, Pikeville, Kentucky.
Tom Harding
About Tom Harding
Tom Harding is pastor of Zebulon Grace Church located at 6088 Zebulon Highway, Pikeville, Kentucky 41501. You may also contact him by telephone at (606) 631-9053, or e-mail taharding@mikrotec.com. The website address is www.henrytmahan.com.

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